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Messages - CIS

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661
Bleh

I go to the coal region too often to take anyone who mentions white privilege seriously.

Aren't the Appalachians like a third world country in terms of poverty rates and standard of living? 

662
Cool, I got mentioned twice.

663
The Flood / Re: I have a lot of respect for school shooters
« on: January 17, 2016, 08:39:15 PM »
I love how people are actually taking this seriously
im not taking the OP seriously, i just think loaf is a complete and total waste of space, absolutely worthless, and should kill himself

Now that's harsh man.
i dont care. he's fucking awful. i cant believe others actually tolerate him and i sincerely believe that he is a worthless piece of human trash.

He is fairly awful there's no denying that. I personally find him to be amusing so he doesn't really bother me too much. Other than his awful shitposting what else is there to really loathe about him?
theres nothing to like about him; thats my point. he exists solely to act as a terrible internet troll. theres nothing amusing about this situation in my mind. i view people like him with nothing but scorn; i cant even pity someone who refuses to speak in a lucid, intelligent manner, someone who has the mental capacity to contribute to a conversation but actively chooses to shit all over any semblance of decorum.

I concede, however, I don't feel like any energy whatsoever should be wasted on him. As far as I'm concerned he's just a really shitty troll.

664
The Flood / Re: I have a lot of respect for school shooters
« on: January 17, 2016, 08:18:57 PM »
I love how people are actually taking this seriously
im not taking the OP seriously, i just think loaf is a complete and total waste of space, absolutely worthless, and should kill himself

Now that's harsh man.
i dont care. he's fucking awful. i cant believe others actually tolerate him and i sincerely believe that he is a worthless piece of human trash.

He is fairly awful there's no denying that. I personally find him to be amusing so he doesn't really bother me too much. Other than his awful shitposting what else is there to really loathe about him? 

665
The Flood / Re: I have a lot of respect for school shooters
« on: January 17, 2016, 08:13:59 PM »
I love how people are actually taking this seriously
im not taking the OP seriously, i just think loaf is a complete and total waste of space, absolutely worthless, and should kill himself

Now that's harsh man.

666
Serious / Re: Israel and Palestine
« on: January 16, 2016, 06:04:06 PM »
Threads like these make me wish Kiyo was still here.

667
The Flood / Re: The Archive Meme Trilogy
« on: January 15, 2016, 02:11:21 AM »

668
Gaming / Re: Video Games, consent, and you.
« on: January 15, 2016, 01:54:30 AM »
You people will argue about anything.

It's really quite hilarious.

669
The Flood / Re: Why do people hate pedophiles?
« on: January 14, 2016, 09:29:07 PM »
I hate all of you.

670
The Flood / Re: The autistic guy in my class is hilarious
« on: January 13, 2016, 06:54:24 PM »
no idea why they try to integrate mentally disabled people with the "normies". like, they can be in the same school, but, give them their own building and own classes. it sucks being in a cooking class with a retard in your group. luckily, they were sent to do dishes while everyone competent enough can cook.
Generally, its been found that when the students are isolated from other students, the content they learn isn't sufficient enough for standardized testing. Along with that, the teachers themselves tend to communicate lower expectations for the students, leading to self fulfilling prophecies about their inability to complete work.

I can back this up with personal experience since I was shoehorned into the special ed department due to having Asperger Syndrome. The whole time they would underwhelm me even though I had no significant intellectual impairments beyond the realm of mathematics. Needless to say, I went through four years of secondary school language arts without being exposed to any of the major staples of Western humanities. I would imagine that you've seen and heard of similar situations since you're studying to become a teacher.
My experiences haven't been as much the same. I think it's mainly because of the fact that schools have pushed in inclusion classrooms rather than creating completely different classrooms for differentiating learning for the students. From asking teachers during my first block though, completely different classes are only used in severe cases nowadays, aka people whose learning is so severe they need assistance with basic life skills. However, I do think this is a district by district thing and I'm not touching into differentiation and accommodations for students until this semester.

It is however a double edge sword from what I've learned so far. I worked with eighth grade inclusion students last semester that were still at a fifth grade math level. A lot of them also had a third grade ZPD reading level as well. Some of those students I would say really needed to be in a classroom that works at a pace more suited for the students. However, we had to push them along and attempt to teach them pre-algebra  when they had difficultly with basic stuff.

There are certainly cases where they have no choice but to put certain students in specialized classes. The only thing that makes me mad is when kids who don't have any significant intellectual impairments are shoehorned because of a disability that requires special attention (e.g., Dyslexia, Aspergers,Tourette's). Maybe this is just because I'm from the boonies of the US; I'm not sure how common this kind of stuff is in other parts of the country.

671
The Flood / Re: The autistic guy in my class is hilarious
« on: January 13, 2016, 05:09:49 PM »
no idea why they try to integrate mentally disabled people with the "normies". like, they can be in the same school, but, give them their own building and own classes. it sucks being in a cooking class with a retard in your group. luckily, they were sent to do dishes while everyone competent enough can cook.
Generally, its been found that when the students are isolated from other students, the content they learn isn't sufficient enough for standardized testing. Along with that, the teachers themselves tend to communicate lower expectations for the students, leading to self fulfilling prophecies about their inability to complete work.

I can back this up with personal experience since I was shoehorned into the special ed department due to having Asperger Syndrome. The whole time they would underwhelm me even though I had no significant intellectual impairments beyond the realm of mathematics. Needless to say, I went through four years of secondary school language arts without being exposed to any of the major staples of Western humanities. I would imagine that you've seen and heard of similar situations since you're studying to become a teacher.

672
Thank you based Patten.

673
The Flood / Re: How would you describe yourself?
« on: January 12, 2016, 02:10:52 PM »
An average individual. I'm honestly thinking about other people and their characters more than I am about myself.

674
The Flood / Re: Day four without caffeine.
« on: January 12, 2016, 01:49:32 PM »
Caffeine has never helped me feel better. It's always just made me feel like shit.

675
Serious / Re: Smart gun technology
« on: January 12, 2016, 12:32:36 PM »
]>Misplace watch/chip
>attacker breaks into home
>go for gun
>useless gun gets you killed

If you're an idiot who can't keep track of something necessary to use a firearm, chances are you probably shouldn't have a firearm to begin with.

Just saying.

People misplace things all the time. That doesn't automatically mean that they're irresponsible people who can't be trusted around dangerous machinery. 

676
Serious / Re: a step in the right direction
« on: January 11, 2016, 10:15:31 PM »
You mean that one time I may or may not have put a frog on a chunk of dry ice and then uploaded the video to YouTube was illegal?

It is now. You better contact your lawyer.

677
The Flood / Re: Deci's in here
« on: January 11, 2016, 06:46:57 PM »
who gives a fuck

I put that in the title since he's infamous and people love to mess with him. It would draw them into the room.

678
Serious / Re: Smart gun technology
« on: January 11, 2016, 04:27:04 PM »
inb4hegetsdeaththreats

Why would he get death threats?

679
The Flood / Re: Deci's in here
« on: January 11, 2016, 03:20:41 PM »
Why's everyone so obsessed with him?

Why do you think?

680
The Flood / Deci's in here
« on: January 11, 2016, 03:15:53 PM »

681
The Flood / GET IN HERE: https://www.dubtrack.fm/join/sep7
« on: January 11, 2016, 02:56:10 PM »
https://www.dubtrack.fm/join/sep7

This is our replacement for plug.dj

682
Serious / Smart gun technology
« on: January 11, 2016, 02:39:38 PM »
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/inspired-life/wp/2016/01/11/obama-seeks-new-smart-gun-technology-this-nra-member-thinks-he-has-it/

I think this is kind of cool. Any thoughts on the matter?

Spoiler
Quote
When President Obama called for advanced research on “smart” gun technologies last week, Omer Kiyani thought, “I’ve already done that.”

The Detroit-based engineer has developed a technological solution he believes will appease both sides of the contentious gun safety debate.

He should know. He has been on both sides.

Kiyani survived a shooting when he was 16. An unknown gunman fired through the back window of the car Kiyani was in one night with friends and the bullet pierced through his left cheek. The sustained injury has inhibited him from eating on the left side of his mouth.

For Kiyani, improving gun safety is personal. But he’s also a gun owner and a card-carrying member of the National Rifle Association. He doesn’t want to wade into the politics of it. He just feels passionately about developing a way for guns to be safer.

“I think gun violence is a problem. This is me doing my part,” he said. “I’m not a politician. I’m none of that. I am an engineer solving a technical problem.”

The general idea behind smart gun technologies is that only the owner of a firearm could unlock it. It’s not unlike how smartphones can be fingerprint protected. Other technologies have turned the gun itself into the smart technology.

For example, one German company built one with a chip inside that could be unlocked with a watch. But stores in California and Maryland that wanted to sell the guns faced death threats and protests so intense that they backed down.

The backlash is predicated on concerns that the technology will lead to the government mandating that only guns equipped with smart technologies be sold.

Kiyani has developed a solution that doesn’t require buying a new gun. He has created a lock that fits over the trigger of most existing firearms. It can be unlocked with the owner’s fingerprint almost instantaneously.

“I have a device which is an accessory that allows any gun to become a smart gun,” he said. “It doesn’t mess with any of the internals of the gun.”

He has had the idea in his head for many years, but after the shooting in Newtown, Conn., in 2012 that left 20 elementary school children and six adults dead, he felt as though no one was doing anything actionable to curb gun violence.

“Now is the time, no one else is doing it, so I have to do it myself,” he said. “I have to do it because I felt helpless.”

In an e-mailed statement, Amy Hunter, a spokeswoman for the National Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action, the group’s lobbying arm, said the NRA “is not opposed to smart technology.”

“If manufacturers make it and people buy it, that’s fine. We’re not in the business of advocating for products – any products,” Hunter said. “We’re opposed to government mandates that require consumers to purchase particular items. This became an issue in New Jersey when the state passed a bill that said, essentially, once smart gun technology is available, no one can buy any other kind of gun. We are absolutely opposed to that.”

She said that she was not familiar with Kiyani’s product, but that regardless, the answer would be the same.

Eddie Isler, who answered the phone at Gun Owners of America, said that the public should decide whether it wants the technology, but that he sees it as largely unnecessary. Most responsible people already lock their guns away, he said. He also worried what would happen if an intruder came in to your home and only your wife was there and her fingerprint didn’t unlock it, or if the battery died.

Skeptics also worry that if the technology had a glitch, it could cost a life.

Kiyani said the lock can store up to nine fingerprints and has a battery life of several months. As for possible malfunctions, he said, guns themselves are not 100 percent foolproof. They can jam. Relying on any mechanical device for protection is a risk.

He took his product, which costs $319, to the Consumer Electronics Show in Law Vegas last week. He couldn’t demonstrate how it works, though, because he couldn’t bring a gun inside.

A onetime developer of airbag safety technologies, Kiyani left that work last year to focus full time on his biometrics company, Identilock, after he received a $100,000 grant from the Smart Tech Challenges Foundation to develop it. He said the response from gun owners so far has been positive.

At Obama’s announcement of his executive actions on guns and again at his town hall meeting last week, the president said his administration will work with the private sector on new smart gun technologies.

It’s a goal he is likely to repeat during his State of the Union address on Tuesday, where one seat in the first lady’s box will be empty as a tribute to all the Americans killed by guns.

“If a child can’t open a bottle of aspirin, we should make sure they can’t pull a trigger on a gun,” Obama said during his Jan. 5 remarks.

A federal government study determined that 8 percent of unintentional gun-related deaths could have been prevented by a child safety lock. There were nearly 2,000 accidental gun deaths in 2015 and 59 in the first 10 days of 2016, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

“That one email I get that says you saved my life, that will make it all worth it,” Kiyani said. “One life will be worth all this trouble and I know I will save more. Every time this product isn’t out there, there’s a life unsaved.”

683
Serious / Re: a step in the right direction
« on: January 11, 2016, 12:35:02 PM »

684
Can I ban Deci the moment he comes back :>?


no, I can't do that, I need to be politically correct

*ahem*

Spoiler
DECI YOU'RE A FUCKING DELUSIONAL FOOL AND THE REASON THE DEATH PENALTY EXISTS YOU STUPID LITTLE FUCK

oh my~

He apparently wants everyone to know that he deleted his comment and that he spoke too soon when it came to Keemstar. I'm in his Skype chat.

685
Considering that Keemstar was once the king of Xbox Live verbal abuse it doesn't surprise me that he would do the kind of shit that old school trolls used to do.

686
The Flood / Re: Favorite Super Villain
« on: January 09, 2016, 12:05:13 AM »
Verbatim
Some of the greatest villains are the ones that believe in that what they're doing to be good.

This is actually very accurate.

687
The Flood / Re: Goodbye Starbucks!
« on: January 08, 2016, 11:43:06 PM »
What drama did you deal with at work? I imagine you have enough stories about shitty co-workers to fill an entire book.

688
The Flood / Re: Goodbye Starbucks!
« on: January 08, 2016, 11:37:31 PM »
I envy you.

689
The Flood / Re: Any 2015 movies I've missed?
« on: January 08, 2016, 07:19:57 PM »
If you haven't seen this movie then you haven't truly lived.

YouTube

690
Gaming / Re: The Witcher 3 aerial pictures
« on: January 08, 2016, 07:09:24 PM »
wow from that angle you can almost not-see how bad the game is.


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